WashTimes: Judge nixes case against EPA human experiments

It’s a good thing the U.S Public Health Service called off the infamous Tuskegee syphilis experiments in 1972. Had someone sued to stop the horror, a federal judge like the Anthony Trenga might have stopped the suit — not the experiments.

That’s precisely what Judge Trenga did on Jan. 31 in the case of the American Tradition Institute (ATI) v. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

ATI sued the EPA in October to stop an ongoing experiment in which the agency was exposing elderly study subjects (up to 75 years of age) to concentrated levels of a deadly (according to EPA) air pollutant known as PM2.5 (soot or dust much smaller than the width of a human hair).

The lawsuit claimed the experiments were illegal in that they blatantly violated virtually every major standard developed since World War II for the protection of human study subjects used in scientific experiments.

Given that the EPA long ago determined that any exposure to PM2.5 could cause death (as well as a host of other serious health consequences) within hours or days of inhalation, the experiments are fundamentally illegal. Federal regulations and the Nuremberg Code strictly prohibit scientists from treating human subjects like expendable guinea pigs. In the experiment in question, the study subjects were asked to risk their very lives for $12 per hour.

But then the study subjects really weren’t “asked” to risk their lives since the EPA researchers failed — and, in fact, refuses to warn them that PM2.5 could kill them. At the very least, exposing study subjects to a dangerous and deadly toxin without their consent is also known as “assault and battery.”

But to Judge Trenga, the important thing apparently was to nitpick to death the effort to stop the experiments with a narrow reading of the federal rules of civil procedure.

Judge Trenga determined that the EPA’s decision to endanger the lives of its study subjects, including inducing them to a fraudulent consent form, didn’t constitute a “final agency action” under the Administrative Procedures Act. Judge Trenga also determined, as ATI was not being harmed by the experiments, it didn’t have standing to pursue the case.

Presumably Judge Trenga might have allowed an actual human study subject to maintain a lawsuit to stop the experiments, but then again, how would they? The EPA lied to each of them about the risks of the experiment.

But lifetime-appointed and, hence, unaccountable Judge Trenga essentially decided, in agreement with Department of Justice and EPA pleadings, that no one and no law can stop the EPA from breaking the sacrosanct rules protecting human subjects from rogue experimentation. His ruling came despite the fact that the federal rules of civil procedure explicitly state that they “must be construed so as to do justice.”

Thanks to Judge Trenga, EPA (and possibly any other rogue government human experimenter) now has a “GET OUT OF THE NUREMBERG CODE FREE” card.

Perhaps looking for a way to wash his hands of the case, Judge Trenga did ask ATI during the hearing whether a political solution was being sought against the EPA experiments. And yes, the House has asked the EPA Office of the Inspector General (IG) to investigate and Sen. Jim Inhofe (R-Okla.) asked Senate Environment and Public Works Committee chairman Barbara Boxer to hold hearings last October.

But aside from the high probability of a whitewash by the EPA IG and Sen. Boxer’s failure to take any action so far, the experiments are ongoing and the study subjects are in mortal danger now. Moreover, it doesn’t seem reasonable to expect expedited, or even any political action from a polarized Congress that hasn’t passed a basic budget for the country in years.

Consider that Supreme Court Justice John Roberts recently had no qualms about distending the Constitution to compel people to buy health insurance under Obamacare. But federal district court Judge Trenga wasn’t even willing to at least temporarily liberalize his interpretation of the federal rules of civil procedure so that he could at least hear all the facts in the human testing case.

The EPA’s guinea pigs didn’t get any “compassionate conservatism” from this appointee of George W. Bush — of course, they still don’t even know they are being treated like lab rats.

Despite the unfortunate ruling by Judge Trenga, this controversy is not over —not by a long shot. The effort to spotlight and stop the EPA’s outrageous conduct will continue. But don’t expect it to be easy.

When I broke the news of the EPA’s misconduct in this column last April, I noted that in conducting these experiments, the EPA either lied to the study subjects (giving rise to civil and possibly criminal liability) or the agency lied to Congress and the public about the dangers of PM2.5 (risking the agency’s reputation and related regulatory programs). That question remains of great import.

Our tax dollars are being used for (1) illegal and immoral experiments on humans (2) to pay for the EPA executives and employees salaries to fight your attempts to stop them (3) to pay for DOJ attorneys to fight you in court (4) to pay for Judge Trenga to allow and encourage all of the above.
Obscene.